Clinical trials in phase II of drug development are frequently conducted as single-arm two-stage studies with a binary endpoint. Recently, adaptive designs have been proposed for this setting that enable… Click to show full abstract
Clinical trials in phase II of drug development are frequently conducted as single-arm two-stage studies with a binary endpoint. Recently, adaptive designs have been proposed for this setting that enable a midcourse modification of the sample size. While these designs are elaborated with respect to hypothesis testing by assuring control of the type I error rate, the topic of point estimation has up to now not been addressed. For adaptive designs with a prespecified sample size recalculation rule, we propose a new point estimator that both assures compatibility of estimation and test decision and minimizes average mean squared error. This estimator can be interpreted as a constrained posterior mean estimate based on the non-informative Jeffreys prior. A comparative investigation of the operating characteristics demonstrates the favorable properties of the proposed approach. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.